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hypothesis (n.)

1590s, "a particular statement;" 1650s, "a proposition, assumed and taken for granted, used as a premise," from Middle French hypothese and directly from Late Latin hypothesis, from Greek hypothesis "base, groundwork, foundation," hence in extended use "basis of an argument, supposition," literally "a placing under," from hypo- "under" (see hypo-) + thesis "a placing, proposition" (from reduplicated form of PIE root *dhe- "to set, put"). A term in logic; narrower scientific sense is from 1640s.

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Definitions of hypothesis from WordNet

hypothesis (n.)
a proposal intended to explain certain facts or observations;
hypothesis (n.)
a tentative insight into the natural world; a concept that is not yet verified but that if true would explain certain facts or phenomena;
a scientific hypothesis that survives experimental testing becomes a scientific theory
Synonyms: possibility / theory
hypothesis (n.)
a message expressing an opinion based on incomplete evidence;
Synonyms: guess / conjecture / supposition / surmise / surmisal / speculation
From wordnet.princeton.edu